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Árpád stripes ((ハンガリー語:Árpád-sávok)) is the name of a particular heraldic and vexillologic configuration which has been in constant use since the early 13th century in particular in Hungarian heraldry. It can be seen in the ''dexter'' of the current coat of arms of Hungary. They have been associated with the founding dynasty of Hungary, with the House of Árpád, hence the name, but most later rulers and dynasties of Hungary adopted them in one form or another to stress their legitimacy to the Hungarian throne, e.g. by marshalling. The four silver stripes (often depicted as white) are sometimes claimed to symbolise "the four silver rivers" of Hungary—the Danube, Tisza, Sava and Drava. The Árpád stripes are heraldically "barry of eight gules and argent". == In heraldry == The first depiction of the Árpád stripes appear on a coat of arms in 1202 in the seal of King Emeric of Hungary, member of the Árpád Dynasty, though a debated striped banner makes its appearance already on silver coins minted by Stephen I. roughly two centuries earlier. It has ever since formed part of the coat of arms of the ruling dynasties of Hungary and of the coat of arms of the Hungarian state, most of the time, as it does today, ''impaling gules, on a mount vert a crown Or, issuant therefrom a double cross argent'' or marshalled with the Angevins’ ''azure, semé-de-lis Or''. The Árpád stripes appear in many coat of arms of cities of the former Kingdom of Hungary, many of them now in the neighbouring countries of Hungary, such as Kassa (Košice, Slovakia). The modern heraldic use of the Árpád stripes is featured in the seal of the National Security Office of Hungary since 2001. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Árpád stripes」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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